Literature DB >> 30938646

Oral Health in Young Australian Aboriginal Children: Qualitative Research on Parents' Perspectives.

A Durey1, D McAullay2, B Gibson3, L M Slack-Smith1.   

Abstract

Despite dedicated government funding, Aboriginal Australians, including children, experience more dental disease than other Australians, despite it being seen as mostly preventable. The ongoing legacy of colonization and discrimination against Aboriginal Australians persists, even in health services. Current neoliberal discourse often holds individuals responsible for the state of their health, rather than the structural factors beyond individual control. While presenting a balanced view of Aboriginal health is important and attests to Indigenous peoples' resilience when faced with persistent adversity, calling to account those structural factors affecting the ability of Aboriginal people to make favorable oral health choices is also important. A decolonizing approach informed by Indigenous methodologies and whiteness studies guides this article to explore the perceptions and experiences of Aboriginal parents ( N = 52) of young children, mainly mothers, in Perth, Western Australia, as they relate to the oral health. Two researchers, 1 Aboriginal and 1 non-Aboriginal, conducted 9 focus group discussions with 51 Aboriginal participants, as well as 1 interview with the remaining individual, and independently analyzed responses to identify themes underpinning barriers and enablers to oral health. These were compared, discussed, and revised under key themes and interpreted for meanings attributed to participants' perspectives. Findings indicated that oral health is important yet often compromised by structural factors, including policy and organizational practices that adversely preclude participants from making optimal oral health choices: limited education about prevention, prohibitive cost of services, intensive marketing of sugary products, and discrimination from health providers resulting in reluctance to attend services. Current government intentions center on Aboriginal-non-Aboriginal partnerships, access to flexible services, and health care that is free of racism and proactively seeks and welcomes Aboriginal people. The challenge is whether these good intentions are matched by policies and practices that translate into sustained improvements to oral health for Aboriginal Australians. Knowledge Transfer Statement: Slow progress in reducing persistent oral health disparities between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians calls for a new approach to this seemingly intractable problem. Findings from our qualitative research identified that structural factors-such as cost of services, little or no education on preventing oral disease, and discrimination by health providers-compromised Aboriginal people's optimum oral health choices and access to services. The results from this study can be used to recommend changes to policies and practices that promote rather than undermine Aboriginal health and well-being and involve Aboriginal people in decisions about their health care.

Entities:  

Keywords:  child health; dental health services; health education dental; health services Indigenous; racism; social determinants of health

Year:  2016        PMID: 30938646     DOI: 10.1177/2380084416667244

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JDR Clin Trans Res        ISSN: 2380-0844


  4 in total

Review 1.  The impact of neoliberal generative mechanisms on Indigenous health: a critical realist scoping review.

Authors:  Brianna Poirier; Sneha Sethi; Dandara Haag; Joanne Hedges; Lisa Jamieson
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2022-06-15       Impact factor: 10.401

2.  Yarning about oral health: perceptions of urban Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women.

Authors:  Kaley Butten; Newell W Johnson; Kerry K Hall; Maree Toombs; Neil King; Kerry-Ann F O'Grady
Journal:  BMC Oral Health       Date:  2020-02-03       Impact factor: 2.757

3.  Child-, Family-, and Community-Level Facilitators for Promoting Oral Health Practices among Indigenous Children.

Authors:  Brianna F Poirier; Joanne Hedges; Lisa G Smithers; Megan Moskos; Lisa M Jamieson
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-01-20       Impact factor: 3.390

4.  "Does this dental mob do eyes too?": perceptions and attitudes toward dental services among Aboriginal Australian adults living in remote Kimberley communities.

Authors:  Jilen Patel; Angela Durey; Steven Naoum; Estie Kruger; Linda Slack-Smith
Journal:  BMC Oral Health       Date:  2021-12-25       Impact factor: 2.757

  4 in total

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